“Mom, if you hit my son, threaten my wife, or try to take their home, I hope Lena shows you the mercy you never showed her.”
The silence afterward was total.
Then the sheriff spoke. “Grant Vale, I need you to come with me.”
Grant recoiled. “For what?”
“Forgery, fraud, elder financial exploitation related to your father’s estate, and assault witnessed tonight.”
“Assault?” Grant shouted.
I raised my sleeve, revealing bruises already blooming where his fingers had dug into my arm. “You really should have been careful.”
Marjorie turned on me then, all jewels and venom. “You little snake. Daniel would be ashamed.”
I walked close enough for her to see that my tears were gone.
“Daniel knew exactly who I was,” I said. “A forensic accountant. The woman who found the holes in Grant’s shell companies. The woman who gave Clara the first bank trail. The woman you called stupid because I preferred bedtime stories to boardrooms.”
Clara slid another paper forward. “Marjorie, Lena is filing for a protective order tonight. You are to leave this property immediately. Your access to Daniel’s accounts is frozen pending investigation.”
Marjorie looked around the foyer, at the portraits, the chandeliers, the staircase she had ruled like a throne.
“You can’t throw me out,” she whispered.
I picked up Daniel’s watch and fastened it around Eli’s small wrist. “Watch me.”
Three months later, the house no longer smelled like lilies and lies.
It smelled like pancakes, crayons, and sunlight.
Grant took a plea deal and lost his license, his condo, and every friend who had mistaken arrogance for power. Marjorie moved into a rented apartment across town, awaiting trial, her invitations unanswered, her name removed from every board she had once controlled.
Eli still had a faint fear of raised voices, but he laughed more now. At night, he slept with Daniel’s watch on the table beside him.
On the first warm evening of spring, we planted a maple tree in the backyard.
“For Dad?” Eli asked.
“For Dad,” I said. “And for us.”
He pressed dirt around the roots with both hands. “Are we safe now?”
I looked at the house Daniel had left us, the sky turning gold above the roof, and my son’s face bright with something stronger than survival.
“Yes,” I said. “We are.”